Everything Is Real Cover

First Steps: Poemwalking the Ice Age National Scenic Trail in the Northern Kettle Moraine

Katrina Serwe

Release Date: May 27, 2025

Print ISBN: 978-1-948559-90-4 • EPUB ISBN: 978-1-948559-91-1

It is and it isn’t a loop trail— / it can be if you want. / I choose the tower view of wind- / sculpted lake in grey marble, / splashes of vermilion on green / like the first raindrops of fall.

Weather breaks over couplets and gathers into fat stanzas as these poems travel Wisconsin’s Ice Age Trail. The sound of vegetation, mold, and stones against stones under the soles of the speaker’s boots is accomplished with musicality and the precise language Katrina Serwe choses as carefully as the next step on the trail.

This collection is both a travelogue and a record of one of our country’s most fragile places, and is highly recommended to readers of nature poetry and prose seeking an immersive experience with an unusual place. Serwe has crafted a prestige guidebook from her remarkable poems.

First Steps was a 2024 selection of the Brain Mill Press + Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets Chapbook Contest.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Katrina Serwe, PhD, worked as a therapist, professor, and researcher in the field of occupational therapy for over two decades. She started writing poetry after a transcendent midlife crisis brought her back to her love of literature, art, and nature. Her poems have been featured in a variety of publications such as The Solitary Plover, Blue Heron Review, Bramble, Portage Magazine, and Scrawl Place. Serwe was the first-place winner of the 2024 Wisconsin Writers Association Jade Ring contest for poetry. Her current project is foraging poems on Wisconsin’s Ice Age National Scenic trail. You can follow her journey at www.katrinaserwe.com.

AN EXCERPT from First Steps: Poemwalking the Ice Age National Scenic Trail in the Northern Kettle Moraine by Katrina Serwe

for those who make the path possible
Ice Age Trail Volunteers

I see you—
in the mowed grass,
fresh yellow trail-blazes,
that new-wood smell
across the bridge
as my dry feet follow
mapped-out clear
views on this thread
of connection we call
the Ice Age Trail.
I whisper my thanks
to you—my friends
whose names
I may never know.

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